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    Categories: 2023

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 09/05/2023

                                        Tuesday, September 5, 2023


Russia Seeks Clarification From Armenia On International Court


Netehrlands -- The building of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The 
Hague, November 23, 2015


The Russian Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday that it has requested 
“clarifications” over the Armenian government’s decision to send the founding 
treaty of the International Criminal Court (ICC) to the country’s parliament for 
ratification.
“We will decide on our next steps based on the content of Yerevan's response,” 
the ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, told reporters.

Moscow has repeatedly issued stern warnings to Yerevan since Armenia’s 
Constitutional Court gave the green light for the ratification in March one week 
after the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin over 
war crimes allegedly committed by Russia in Ukraine. It has said that the 
recognition of The Hague tribunal’s jurisdiction would have “extremely negative” 
consequences for Russian-Armenian relations.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government has clearly ignored the warnings. It 
said on September 1 that it has formally asked the National Assembly to ratify 
the ICC treaty also known as the Rome Statute.

It is still not clear whether the draft decision submitted by the government to 
Armenian lawmakers calls for an unconditional ratification or contains 
exemptions for Russian officials. Independent legal experts believe that the 
ratification would require the Armenian authorities to arrest Putin and 
extradite him to the ICC if he visits the South Caucasus country.

A senior Armenian official said in July that Armenian and Russian diplomats are 
holding “active discussions” on the issue and should find a “legal solution” 
acceptable to both sides. The clarification sought by Moscow suggests that no 
such agreement has been reached.

Pashinian’s administration is planning to submit to the ICC’s jurisdiction amid 
mounting tensions with Moscow. It announced the dispatch of the ratification 
document to the parliament two days after Zakharova blamed Azerbaijan’s blockade 
of the Lachin corridor on Pashinian’s recent decision to recognize Karabakh as 
part of Azerbaijan. Yerevan rejected the claim, citing a long list of Armenian 
grievances against Moscow.




Armenia Sends First Humanitarian Aid To Ukraine

        • Artak Khulian

UKRAINE - An explosion is seen in the sky over Kyiv during a Russian missile 
strike, August 30, 2023.


Armenia is providing humanitarian assistance to Ukraine for the first time since 
the Russian invasion of the country, sources told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on 
Tuesday.

The sources that did not want to be identified said Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s wife, Anna Hakobian, will personally hand over the aid to the 
Ukrainian side when she flies to Kyiv to attend the annual Summit of First 
Ladies and Gentlemen that will be held there on Wednesday.

The information was not immediately confirmed by Pashinian’s office or the 
Armenian Foreign Ministry. The volume and other details of the reported aid 
allocated by Yerevan were also not known.

The Kyiv summit has been held since 2021 at the initiative of Ukraine’s first 
lady, Olena Zelenska. A partial list of its participants released by the 
organizers on Tuesday morning did not include Pashinian’s wife.

Her reported trip to Ukraine will come amid Armenia’s deepening rift with 
Russia, its traditional ally increasingly criticized by Pashinian and other 
Armenian leaders for what they see as a lack of Russian support in the conflict 
with Azerbaijan.

Armenia has so far been careful not to openly condemn Russia’s military campaign 
in Ukraine launched in February 2022. Even so, Pashinian stated in May this year 
that his country is “not Russia’s ally in the war with Ukraine.” Moscow said it 
“took note” of the statement.

Ukraine’s current and former governments have repeatedly voiced support for 
Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.




Russia Staying Put In Armenia, Insists Kremlin

        • Artak Khulian

Russia - Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends the Russia-Armenia talks on the 
sidelines of the Eurasian Economic Union Forum in Moscow, May 25, 2023.


Russia continued to round on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Tuesday, with 
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov insisting that Moscow will remain a key player 
in the South Caucasus and Armenia in particular.

“Russia is an absolutely integral part of this region, so it cannot go anywhere. 
Russia cannot leave Armenia,” Peskov said, adding that it will continue to play 
the role of a regional “security guarantor.”

“There are more Armenians living in Russia than in Armenia itself, and most of 
them are exemplary, patriotic citizens of the Russian Federation who make a 
significant contribution to the development of our country,” he told reporters.

Peskov went on to also emphasize Armenia’s close economic ties with Russia which 
were instrumental in double-digit economic growth recorded in the South Caucasus 
last year.

President Vladimir Putin’s press secretary responded to Pashinian’s claims that 
Russia is “unwilling or unable” to defend Armenia despite bilateral treaties and 
may “leave” the South Caucasus in the near future. In a newspaper interview 
publicized over the weekend, Pashinian also said that Armenia’s long-standing 
heavy reliance on Russia for security has proved a “strategic mistake.”

An unnamed Russian diplomatic source quoted by the official TASS news agency 
denounced his comments on Tuesday. He also warned Yerevan against helping the 
West “squeeze Russia out” of the region.

The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, was more scathing 
about the Armenian leader’s latest jibes at Moscow.

“One should have the ability to answer for their own actions, rather than blame 
others and do so endlessly, on every occasion,” Zakharova told a news briefing 
in Moscow on Tuesday.

“You need to take your own responsibility and not shift that responsibility onto 
someone else,” she said. “This is what makes a politician, a statesman different 
from a passing person who does not think about the interests of his country.”

Tensions between two allied countries have steadily increased over the past 
year, with Armenian leaders increasingly complaining about what they see as a 
lack of Russian support for Armenia in the conflict with Azerbaijan.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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